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Twelve-year-old Nicolas de La Salle and his family sailed to La Louisiane (French Louisiana) with Governor Iberville to start a French settlement on the Gulf coast. Nicolas's father was with the explorer, Robert Cavelier de La Salle, when he reached ...
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Gone Home: Southern Folk Gravestone Art
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Gone Home: Southern Folk Gravestone Art

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Description:

Four decades ago, folklorists Jack and Olivia Solomon began documenting Southern cemeteries, recording the names, lives, and epitaphs of thousands of the deceased. The volume they now share with us is not a Book of the Dead, but a Book of Life.

The Solomons reveal here their love and respect for the "final resting places" of this world. In these pages are recorded the sorrow for a lost child, the anger over the murder of a brother, the strengths of an admired civic leader, the life of a beloved preacher, the character of a stalwart soldier, as well as the grief for a mother, a father, a son, a daughter, a wife, a husband. Many of these epitaphs console and give promise of a "better home over yonder." Others remind one of the shortness of life and the surety of death. As in life, there is wit-the humor of a wife who reminds her spouse, "I told you I was sick!"-and profundity-the laconic remark, "She hath done what she could." The book also discusses historical precedents for Alabama epitaphs, different types of epitaphs, gravestone writings as folk literature, gravestones as architecture/sculpture, and the lettering of epitaphs.

Product Details:
Paperback: 131 pages
Publisher: NewSouth
Publication Date: 2004-11
Language: English
ISBN: 1588381161
Product Length: 9.9 inches
Product Width: 7.08 inches
Product Height: 0.34 inches
Product Weight: 0.64 pounds
Package Length: 9.8 inches
Package Width: 6.4 inches
Package Height: 0.5 inches
Package Weight: 0.15 pounds
Average Customer Rating: based on 3 reviews
Customer Reviews:
Average Customer Review: 2.5 ( 3 customer reviews )
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

16 of 17 found the following review helpful:

3Great book,except for the textMar 20, 2008
By Charles H. Levenson "chubbybuns"
In"Gone Home;Southern Folk Gravestone Art"authors Jack & Olivia Solomon present us with a wide array of interesting epitapths,and photographer Suzannah Solomon adds to the work with some fairly nice pictures...If only the whole book was just gravestone epitaphs and photographs..Alas,this is not the case..the authors Solomon have added several dozen pages of "expert"mumbo-jumbo concerning thier "expert"view on grave symbols,thier meaning,thier origins,and whatnot...
While certain symbols are undoubtedly universal,the way in which these symbols are used and/or the meanings they have for individuals differs from area to area,from culture to culture...Oftentimes symbols appear on a headstone at the direct request of a survivor,but just as often they appear on the whim of the stonemason,or come pre-carved..
One branch of my family came from Italy,and among that branch was a stonemason who did much cemetery work prior to 1950...Before he himself died he told me some of the stories related to his work..Angels often were merely carvings of his wife or children with wings attached,the wings being accepted as being part and parcel of what an agel was expected to look like..symbols that appeared on many of his carved headstones did so because he found them easy to carve and/or they were favorite devices of his,and not because they necessarily had any folkish value,or followed any pre-concieved notions about community values ,expectations,or iconography..Further,he said that this viewpoint,these habits,were widespread amongst stonemasons of his generation,who more often than not were trying to impart something of themselves and/or thier families into permanenece rather than observing any widespread folkish tradition,as the Solomons would have us believe..
All in all this volume would have been a lot better if the Solomons had dispensed with thier "expert"opinions and just let the stones speak for themselves.

10 of 10 found the following review helpful:

1Deceiving TitleJun 03, 2008
By nataliegoes
I don't think I've ever given such a bad review before, but this is horrible and not worth your time or money. Although the cover looks very professional, don't be fooled. This is a couple's ideas on cemetery inscriptions, most of which can't be backed up and seems pompous as well as being either wrong, or so simple that it need not be mentioned. And the book has almost nothing to do with "Art" or "Folk Art", but is a collection of some of their favorite inscriptions in a 3 county area in Alabama. So the Title "Gone Home: Southern Folk Gravestone Art" is practically a lie. The insides of the book feel more like one of those cookbooks your church or school use to put together to raise money, rather than what the lovely cover would have you believe. A significant portion of the book are the poorly calligraphied copies of some of those inscriptions that the authors so enjoyed, most of which were dull and mundane, and added nothing to the reader's understanding of the past. And the writing style of the book is atrocious, trite and affected. Wow, what a waste of a perfectly great idea.

8 of 8 found the following review helpful:

3Memoir more than scholarly work.Mar 18, 2009
By Jonathan Smith "archao-geek"
I debated what rating to give this. I purchased it expecting a somewhat scholarly work on folk gravestones in the South - unfortunately, this book is a combination family memoir of their trips to visit cemeteries and sort-of travel journal. The description of symbolism lacks any citations or discussion of how symbolism varies with culture. The photographs and illustrations vary in quality, although as explained in the text they were taken by one of the authors' children over the span of several years so that is to be expected.

Ultimately, this is the sort of volume you would expect to find in a small-town visitor center, something written by locals about the immediate area. There is absolutely nothing wrong with this except that the book is billed as covering the South, when it covers only a small portion of the region in Alabama. If you are looking for a resource on Alabama, give this a look. If you enjoy reading about cemeteries you will find that in this book as well, but if you're looking for a scholarly analysis of cemeteries across the South you will not find it in this volume.

 
 
 
 
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